In real life, it can be complex...that's what makes it interesting and fun.
Do the best you can with what you have.
My soil was severely lacking in nitrogen and organic matter. I could have pulled myself up by my
boot straps and done it without inputs.
But...the South Bend organic resorces dept collects
yard waste and tree trimmings and turns it into pretty good compost. You can also get mulch from chipped up
trees.
Four bucks a pickup truck load if they load it with a big loader. Free if you shovel it yourself.
So, I am happy to close the loop and encourage South Bend to continue to make good use of organic matter.
I can pick up a load on my lunch hour, and it costs just a bit of gas.
Would it be better if everybody composted it on site and used it to improve the
local soil and agrculture? Sure. But not everybody is going to do that.
This is a little bit like, the citizens of no-common-sense-ville have decided that gold and silver have no intrinsic value. So let's just throw it all in a big pile and let the dumb country bumpkins haul it off for us.
Who knows what they even use it for?
I feel richer every time I haul a load home. I wish they weren't foolish, but I'm not going to let the resource go to waste. They used to just haul it all to the landfill...